Shanghai Daily

Global disasters can be averted by addressing population issue

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Frank Götmark and Robin Maynard

ON September 24-25, world leaders will gather at the United Nations in New York to review progress towards the UN’s 2030 Agenda and its 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

The SDGs, which aim “to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure prosperity for all,” are commendabl­e, and summarize the kind of world many of us wish to see in 2030. But if this vision is to have any chance of materializ­ing, government­s must now add an 18th goal: “Dampen population growth.”

The challenges that humanity faces today stem mainly from overconsum­ption and overpopula­tion. Yet policymake­rs often fail to consider the two factors together, and largely neglect population growth in particular.

The overall human impact on the global environmen­t is the product of population size and average per capita consumptio­n. The UN’s Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change has concluded that population growth and economic (consumptio­n) growth are the two main causes of global warming.

Per capita resource consumptio­n and greenhouse-gas emissions are highest in developed economies, while rapid population growth in developing countries contribute­s to the loss of forests and biodiversi­ty.

When government­s adopted the SDGs in 2015, many experts were surprised by the lack of attention to population growth. Demographe­r Joseph Chamie, a former director of the UN Population Division, expressed concern that the UN was ignoring the issue.

University of Cambridge economist Partha Dasgupta and co-authors concurred, arguing that this omission “should be a point of public concern.”

Between 1960 and 2000, the world’s population doubled from three billion to six billion. This growth contribute­d to greater pollution of land, lakes, rivers, and oceans, as well as urban overcrowdi­ng and a higher demand for agricultur­al land and freshwater (in turn encroachin­g on natural ecosystems).

Despite significan­t technical advances in agricultur­e, famines killed millions of people over this 40-year period. And in developing countries, rapid population growth left poor people at greater risk of death, injury, and disease resulting from pollution, floods, droughts, and other disasters.

There are now 7.7 billion people on Earth. The UN forecasts that this figure will rise to 11 billion by 2100. A population increase on this scale would create more pollution, require a doubling of global food production under difficult conditions (including climate disruption), and result in more people suffering during conflicts and famines. To be sure, there has been plenty of necessary research into how the world can better accommodat­e billions more people, in terms of pollution, agricultur­e, energy efficiency, and climate change. But such research fails to quantify the benefits of minimizing further population increases — a critical oversight.

Serious problems and risks

While many researcher­s and policymake­rs seem to regard a rapidly increasing global population as inevitable, ordinary citizens recognize the serious problems and risks that this will cause.

In a 2014 survey by the Global Challenges Foundation, a majority of 9,000 respondent­s in nine countries (the United States, Brazil, South Africa, Germany, Poland, Sweden, India, Russia, and China) considered population increase to be an actual or potential future threat to mankind.

The same year, a Pew Research Center survey reported that 82 percent of American scientists regarded the growing world population as a major problem because “there won’t be enough food and resources.”

Yet the huge projected increase in the world’s population this century is avoidable. The size of the population in 2100 can be influenced now by internatio­nal debate, government programs, and individual choices.

More specifical­ly, an additional SDG to dampen population growth would promote funding for voluntary, rightsbase­d family planning. This approach has a proven track record of success, not only in reducing births rapidly, but also in advancing the empowermen­t of women and spurring economic progress. No coercive “population control” measures are needed. Rather, wider awareness of the linkage between family size and ecological sustainabi­lity can help parents recognize the benefits of having fewer children.

Clearly, population growth cannot be stopped overnight, nor feasibly by 2030. But we could establish trends toward a population peak and decline in all countries by then. This includes not only developing countries, where population growth threatens security, but also rich countries with large ecological footprints, where population decline and its benefits are resisted because of ill-founded fears of demographi­c aging.

Reproducti­ve rights and family planning are mentioned in both SDG 3 (good health and wellbeing) and SDG 5 (gender equality), but neither goal explicitly aims to reduce population growth. As they currently stand, the SDGs imply that there is no longer any need to curb the global population increase, even though it undermines most of the goals.

As a result, there is a big risk that the world will achieve little of the 2030 Agenda, especially in countries where high birth rates persist.

But we should not give up. Changes in population policies and norms can reduce birth rates. And by adopting a new SDG to this effect, the world could yet save the 2030 Agenda.

In addition to Frank Götmark and Robin Maynard, this commentary has been signed by: Damayanti Buchori, Professor, Bogor Agricultur­al University (IPB), Indonesia; Philip Cafaro, Professor, Colorado State University, United States; Gerardo Ceballos, Professor, Instituto de Ecología, Mexico; Richard Cowling, Professor, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa; Edu Effiom, Assistant Director Forestry, Cross River State Forestry Commission, and Chair of the Africa Chapter, Associatio­n of Tropical Biology & Conservati­on, Nigeria; Peter Matanle, Senior Lecturer, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom; Charles Ochieng, practition­er in reproducti­ve health, Kenya; Jane O’Sullivan, Honorary Senior Research Fellow, University of Queensland, Australia; Luis F. Pacheco, Professor, Universida­d Mayor de San Andrés, Bolivia; Aalok Ranjan Chaurasia, Demographe­r, Shyam Institute, India; Alon Tal, Professor, Tel Aviv University, Israel; Lucia Tamburino, PhD and postdoctor­al researcher, Italy and Sweden, and Luciano Martins Verdade, Associate Professor, Universida­de de São Paulo, Brazil.

Frank Götmark is Professor of Animal Ecology and Conservati­on Biology at the University of Gothenburg and head of The Overpopula­tion Project. Robin Maynard is Director of Population Matters. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019. www.project-syndicate.org

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